The Supreme Court last week struck down a Trump-era ban on the gun accessary.
WASHINGTONâSen. Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.) on June 18 blocked a Democrat-backed bill to ban bump stocks, days after the Supreme Court reversed a Trump-era ban on the gun accessory.
Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) requested unanimous consent for the Banning Unlawful Machinegun Parts Act, meaning only one senator was needed to reject the measure.
âThereâs no legitimate use for a bump stock … what they are tailor-made for is a mass shooting,â Mr. Heinrich said. âCongress needs to act. We need to pass my bill banning bump stocks and do it now.â
Mr. Ricketts, when he objected, said that the legislation was broader than it first appeared, arguing that it targeted any gun accessory that increased the rate of fire.
âThis bill would ban literally any item that makes a firearm easier, and in some cases safer, to shoot,â Mr. Ricketts said.
âThis will not be the last time you hear about these devices on the floor of the Senate,â said Mr. Heinrich in his response to the objection.
âWeâd be a lot better off if psychopaths couldnât get their hands on machine guns,â Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) told reporters at the Capitol on June 17.
âIs it good politics to make it easier for potential mass killers to get their hands on machine guns?… All the signs suggest this is still a top-of-mind issue for voters.â
Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) said that any legislation to ban bump stocks might violate the Second Amendment.
âIt treads close to the line,â Mr. Cotton told CNNâs âState of the Unionâ on June 16.
âYouâd want to look at the legislative language, but more than anything, what we need to do to stop crime in this country is to get tough on crime,â he said.
The ban on bump stocks was issued in the aftermath of a 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas, which resulted in 60 fatalities and hundreds of injuries. The ATF, with the support of President Donald Trump, banned the gun accessory on the grounds that it purportedly transformed a normal rifle into a machine gun. Bump stock owners were ordered to turn them over to the ATF or destroy them.
Texas gun store owner Michael Cargill filed suit against the ATF after turning over two bump stocks under protest.
The Supreme Court, in its majority opinion, ruled that a âsemiautomatic rifle equipped with a bump stock is not a âmachine gunâ because it does not fire more than one shot âby a single function of the trigger.â
With the June 14 ruling, the high court has placed the matter before Congress to decide.
âThere is a simple remedy for the disparate treatment of bump stocks and machineguns,â said Justice Samuel Alito in his concurrence opinion.
âCongress can amend the lawâand perhaps would have done so already if ATF had stuck with its earlier interpretation. Now that the situation is clear, Congress can act.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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